Here’s your chance to step to the Edge of Chaos

School of Public Health Dean Max Michael and program manager Chenoia Bryant show the benefits of the curved blackboard wall at the Edge of Chaos.

Max Michael, M.D., has an inner vision that’s the exact opposite of his outward demeanor. The School of Public Health dean is organized, or certainly appears that way to others. He is always kindly and soft-spoken. He’s almost a perfect picture of calm.

But his vision — or ideas shaped by conversations with faculty from all parts of campus — screams the opposite. He has had a dream for some time of a place on campus that invites disorder, near bedlam, approaching pandemonium. It’s a place that pits the mind against the unpredictability that can lead to utter confusion. It’s a vision that gives people the opportunity to run right up to the edge of, well, chaos.

Now that Michael has hung the welcome sign to this new space, dubbed the Edge of Chaos — where he envisions brilliant minds gathering to share ideas and develop solutions to local and global problems — another feeling has crept into his mind.

Fear.

“This is absolutely terrifying,” Michael says. “I have a great enthusiasm for this space, because it is so full of opportunity, not to mention just gorgeous. But this is very much a build-it-and-hope-people-will-come project. I want people to really use this space, and the challenge in the next several months is to ensure that people feel comfortable to wander in and use it.”

The Edge of Chaos, located on the fourth floor of Lister Hill Library, is open and ready for faculty, staff, students and community members to use. The space includes conference and media rooms, sofas and desks, glassed-in offices and other amenities to stimulate thought.

“Here” is the fourth floor of Lister Hill Library, where the Edge of Chaos is open and ready for faculty, staff, students and community members to use. The space includes conference and media rooms, sofas and desks, glassed-in offices and other amenities to stimulate thought.

The official grand opening is scheduled at noon Tuesday, Oct. 23, when author Steven Johnson will deliver the School of Public Health’s annual Samuelson Lecture. Johnson, the bestselling author of Where Good Ideas Come From, will speak on good ideas and examining the sources of creativity in all of us.

That’s ultimately what Michael wants — a place in which people from the community can gather, tap their imaginations, examine problems and solutions or develop new ideas.

“What I hope is that somebody grabs another person and says, ‘Let’s go to the Edge of Chaos. I’ve got an idea.’ And then I hope the walls and the windows are covered with sticky notes and scribbling. Let’s use the space. We can repair the scuff marks on the floor, repaint the walls and replace the tile. Don’t be afraid to use the space.”

Solving wicked problems

Confronting and investigating what Scott Plutchak calls wicked problems — those big, complicated problems that are difficult to get your arms around — requires bringing people from different disciplines together in an environment that fosters their creativity. Plutchak, the interim director of the Edge of Chaos, sees the space as an ideal fit for UAB investigators and community thinkers to come together.

“While there’s an amazing amount of brilliant work going on at UAB, it’s sometimes tough to find out who might be working on an aspect of a problem that connects to something that you’re doing, but that helps you see it in a new way,” Plutchak says. “We’re hoping that the Edge of Chaos — both the physical space and, in some ways more important, the still-in-development Web space — will help make those kinds of connections happen. Not just among UAB people, but among UAB people and those in the Birmingham community as well.”

Epidemiology Professor Elizabeth Delzell and the Pharmaco-Epidemiology and Economics Research (PEER) Group have been utilizing the smart boards in the Edge of Chaos this summer.

Several groups used the space this summer, including The Birmingham Business Alliance, BarCamp and Johnston Barton Law Firm. The Edge of Chaos also will host the global Ignite Birmingham session Thursday, Sept. 20.

Two UAB groups — the Office of Energetics and the Pharmaco-Epidemiology and Economics Research (PEER) Group — have offices located in the Edge of Chaos. Part of PEER’s work uses the tools available at the Edge of Chaos to work with other groups around the country.

“Everybody that has visited here loves this space,” says Elizabeth Delzell, Sc.D., professor of epidemiology. “We certainly love it. We use the smart boards a lot, and we recently conducted a webinar with investigators from all over the country and were able to share the board with them. It’s created some wonderful opportunities already.”

Of course, Michael has an idea for encouraging the UAB community to work on issues of importance, and a campuswide “Wicked Problem Challenge” is in the development stage.

The challenge will be modeled after the School of Public Health’s Back of the Envelope Awards and will give each school the chance to pick a wicked problem and create a team to work on it for an academic year.

Faculty, staff and students interested in using the Edge of Chaos can contact Chenoia Bryant, program manager, at chenoia@uab.edu. If you’re interested in seeing the space, Michael says to come on by. He’s eager to see what might be created from visiting.

“For example, I think about someone like Eric Jack in the School of Business, who has talked about financial literacy in Alabama as a difficult problem,” Michael says. “How can we solve it? How can we make it better? The model would be that the School of Business would create a team that would work on this for the academic year. They would have one of the offices at the Edge of Chaos as a place they could throw their stuff and lock the door and be able to work on it. Every school can pick a wicked problem to try and solve.”

Faculty, staff and students interested in using the Edge of Chaos can contact Chenoia Bryant, program manager, at chenoia@uab.edu. If you’re interested in seeing the space, Michael says to come on by. He’s eager to see what might be created from visiting.

“A new book, a new grant, a new business, maybe a new course,” Michael says. “I don’t know, but I can’t wait to see.”

UAB IT’s SPARK initiative, which has generated more than 60 ideas since its inception last month, inspired an easy win for campus: an increase in the size limit for files uploaded to the UAB Dropbox. Share your idea on the new SPARK site; BlazerID required.

UAB IT is crowdsourcing innovation with SPARK, a new site that enables UAB faculty, staff and students to submit ideas for technology and vote to support the ideas of others. “Our intent is to create a voice for you,” said Curt Carver, Ph.D., UAB chief information officer and vice president of information technology.

Innovative mobile applications for HIV/STI programs are the topic of a panel discussion to be held by the UAB Center for AIDS Research 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m. Feb. 9 in The Edge of Chaos in Lister Hill Library.

Attend an open lab in the Center for Teaching and Learning 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weekdays Jan. 5-Jan. 16 for assistance with Canvas, Respondus, iclickers, GoToTraining, GoToMeeting, etc. No appointment is needed.

UAB IT will ensure enterprise systems and applications are protected, but any server using SSLv3 can be exploited by POODLE — Padding Oracle on Downgrade Legacy Encryption. Server administrators should take immediate action to disable it and use more recent versions. Learn more.

UAB has developed interim guidelines for using public cloud applications and services — such as file storage, Web conferencing and content hosting — to store information related to university business. Review them online to ensure that your handling of information complies with all relevant UAB policies and best practices.